Badlands Media - OnlyLands Ep. 48: Predictive Programming, Congressional Scandals, and the Strange Logic of Modern Politics

Episode Date: March 14, 2026

In Episode 48 of OnlyLands, a full menagerie of Badlands Media hosts dives into a wide-ranging conversation that moves from political controversy to cultural manipulation and institutional dysfunction.... The show opens with discussion of a bizarre news story involving a SWAT shootout tied to the security guard of a sitting congresswoman, raising questions about political vetting, accountability, and how figures in power manage their inner circles. From there, the conversation expands into deeper territory as the hosts examine the concept of predictive programming and the strange ways major events appear to surface in television and film long before they happen in real life. They debate whether these moments are coincidence, psychological conditioning, or something more intentional designed to make future events feel familiar when they occur. Later in the episode, the discussion turns toward large-scale government spending and the future of space exploration, questioning whether massive public investments in space programs actually fund exploration or quietly flow into intelligence and defense projects behind the scenes. Blending humor, skepticism, and free flowing debate, the hosts unpack everything from political absurdities to cultural narratives in a conversation that is equal parts irreverent and thought provoking.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:10 of the badlands explain those badlands that's a hell of a name well good evening everybody and happy Good evening. Don't know. Oh, God. How's everybody doing? I'm doing really good. I just learned something just blew my mind.
Starting point is 00:00:38 Do you guys want to hear? Not really. Yeah. Jay, how are you doing? I'm doing all right, John. I've got a little under the weather this week, but I am going to try to hang in here
Starting point is 00:00:48 without having a coughing fit. Okay, Zach, I was joking. You can speak your mind. Okay, Zach, go ahead. Okay, so there was just a shootout in Dallas with a SWAT team and a wanted felon that they were pursuing. And it turns out that he was Jasmine Crockett's security guard. And now he's dead. Oops.
Starting point is 00:01:13 Just like the future career politics. Yeah, wasn't he like he was like pretending to be a cop or something I heard? All I saw was that Jasmine Crockett security. security guard was shot in a shootout with SWAT teams. I don't know any of the circumstances, but I just thought that it was fairly notable that a sitting U.S. Congresswoman would hire a wanted felon as her security guard. Like how did it?
Starting point is 00:01:42 What's that surprise? It's Jasmine Crockett, though. Isn't that surprising? It's more, Jasmine Crockett herself, not especially, but a member of U.S. Congress.
Starting point is 00:01:52 I mean, I know she's on her way out. But, I mean, don't they screen people? I mean, I guess they didn't bother looking at the Ywan brothers. I'm sure somebody's going to say that. But there has to be a process. You would imagine that at least there should be.
Starting point is 00:02:07 And if there isn't or it's being bypassed, then obviously that's something that needs to be disclosed. And we need to understand why. Maybe it was intentional. You know, maybe she's just, you know, going for her street cred or her her, her, her hood. her hood when her hood personality comes out it helps her street cred to have some thug on her uh security detail who knows we'll find out a little more yeah that would that would explain a little bit because i'm sort of disappointed in her in a way that you know there's part of me that wants to believe she's you know that she's smarter than her persona and and so what i sort of want to preserve that
Starting point is 00:02:46 because you know and i think because there's evidence right when she drops her her accent then and she sounds very articulate and uh well you're not wrong mad i mean she is smarter than her persona yeah but the level of intelligence uh that she actually achieves is still far below the general population way below the bar yeah i'm part with gabin newsome though yeah i got one question did you shoot like this or did you shoot like this oh i like he's telling in dallas i'm betting like that was he even looking when he shot was he doing this one you don't go where and you shoot run and he's like this he's a switch on it and just came that's how he lost that's why he lost the shootout he wasn't even looking at the target apparently he um he's he was wanted for impersonating a police officer or something multiple
Starting point is 00:03:35 times wearing uniform and everything he um got pursued to a hospital garage or something he like barricaded himself in his car i mean that's a good place to get shot it always works out right yeah yeah they tear gassed him to get him out of the car and then when he came out he like came out with his gun and they took him down. What goes there's in his head when they do something like that? Not much, not a lot. I wouldn't think really nothing of substance anyways. You know, it's interesting that he was impersonating a police officer because Kamala Harris, when she was in state government in California, she was overseeing a private,
Starting point is 00:04:14 Masonic fake police force. Like they had a whole, oh yeah, they had like a whole group of people, they were all masons and they and i would i guess i think that there was a female so i guess maybe she'd be order of the eastern star but uh they they created like masonic police force badges and they had uniforms and they would go out into the community and present authority where there was none and it all went directly back to kamala harris when she was the ag Hmm. Can we just create our own police force? Like battle letters? I mean, well, if we have like our own private land, we can be essentially, you know, we can call them whatever we want. We can have our private security. And I don't know if there's laws against calling it like police, maybe Badlandia County Sheriff or something like that. And we could see about incorporating a little area of land. this is going to summon g money to here by the way probably yeah i'll be right back guys i got
Starting point is 00:05:18 daughter's cough me i'll jay pass it on i said it passed it right through the computer man it's you're highly contagious chat is saying my mic is way louder it is way louder yeah i was going to say something too turn your shit down man it's where it was the other night turn your shit down
Starting point is 00:05:40 If it's too loud, you're too old. As they say. We could all increase ours to the same volume. Well, we just have a contest. See it could be loudest. I like it. Zach, you have the ads by chance? I don't.
Starting point is 00:06:02 John does, though. That would be a perfect thing to kill time. It totally would be. So I'll start with Zach. What's interesting with you these? days man what's what's something that you've been talking about this week oh god what you know this week has been kind of boring i'll be honest with you but i thought it was uh certainly interesting that we had a series of uh successful to varying degrees is radical islamic attacks on american
Starting point is 00:06:28 soil at the same time that the democrats uh were stopping the funding of dhs the one agency that might have theoretically prevented all that stuff even let's be honest, none of them would have been prevented. And I also thought that the return of Mohamed Jala, that was definitely something that I did not have on my bingo card because that story has so many layers. So we've got the presence of DHS essentially defunded right now, even though they're operating. They're just, you know, perhaps in a reduced capacity. you've got Mohammed Jala who came into the country and naturalized under Obama and then committed his support of ISIS, his material support of a foreign terrorist organization in 2015, 2016, was prosecuted under the Trump administration.
Starting point is 00:07:24 The court system did not follow the guidelines and recommendations set by the prosecutors, gave him far less time, I believe, like, you know, less than half the time. And then the Obama administration led him out of prison early. And they only gave him like a very short amount of probation. And it wasn't intensive. And like I read that his probation officer was coming to visit him at his home once every six months. Like, yo, I've been on probation before. Okay. And generally speaking, like they're not nice.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Like they want you to perform. You dance like a monkey. And so you got to show up at a certain time at least once a month, sometimes more than once a month, maybe twice a month, sometimes every week, depending on what you've done. And they're also going to make you drop just probably every single week randomly, which is taking drug tests. Then you're going to have all of these other conditions and restrictions, social service, community service, you know, maybe anti-terrorism classes. I don't know. And he didn't have any of that. So they let him out early. That was a failure of the Biden administration. We have the initial failure of the Obama administration, secondary failure in the Biden administration, failure during Trump's term of the judiciary. And then he gets out of
Starting point is 00:08:48 prison and he eventually quickly goes back to what he was doing before. And they were so quick to try to blame Republicans and gun owners because it was a gun crime. and then come to find out, well, he's a previously known supporter of ISIS who all of the aforementioned stuff happened. He acquired the gun illegally and he just so happened to shout Al-Aqbar, which is just so on brand, right? And then virtually the same time, we have another Dirk-a-Durka-Mohamed event take place at the temple in Michigan, which is also located in like a heavily Islamic immigrant populated area. And that one was interesting because, of course, it was a school day, but there were no kids in school. And I haven't heard any sort of explanation as to why nobody was there.
Starting point is 00:09:49 And everybody just kind of said, oh, thank God, the kids weren't there. Like, why were the kids not there? When they scheduled that, they didn't send out the right date to everybody. Apparently. I mean, it's a Jewish temple. They didn't want anybody dying, John. Just think about it. Yeah, that's interesting to me, man, because it's the same playbook they've done for so long with the false flags.
Starting point is 00:10:13 And obviously, as we always say, false flags don't mean that something didn't actually happen. Right. It was all fake. It was definitely orchestrated. This is not an organic popping up of a terrorist. I don't think any terrorist, I can't think of a single time in the last like five to 10 years. where like a terrorist act seemed like it was just a lone person. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:36 Yeah. Do any of you believe that these are like sleeper cells that have been activated because of the bombing in Iran? Well, I mean, that would that would be the convenient narrative. Right. And I mean, there's been a sort of ongoing conversation about that for some time. And President Trump, you know, mentioned the other day. We know who all of them are. He hasn't, there's nothing, there's been nothing stated to indicate that these people were part of that.
Starting point is 00:11:00 But, I mean, prior ISIS affiliation, notwithstanding. The other guy apparently had his entire family killed in a Israeli air raid in Lebanon just before this happened. So, and I guess I don't know. I feel like they don't need to necessarily connect it to Iran. But, I mean, honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if they were out there. I mean, like, does anybody believe that the United States is the only one, you know, going. you know gladio on on on foreign nations i mean i highly doubt that we were the only ones who ever had like a stay behind kind of program um and you know i mean it's it was only just a couple
Starting point is 00:11:41 of years ago that the fbi i sussed out a whole bunch of russian illegals here in the united states i mean have you guys ever seen the americans i've never actually watched the show okay matt you know you like you like it i'm assuming it's a good show yeah yeah i've seen it yeah okay okay jonathan you need to watch the americans it's so good never watch the whole thing so i'm with you there i am a big on spycraft especially when it's done well and and and also of course i like cold work type stuff um but so the the plot of the americans the russia had a program for a special unit within the uh the kgb where they had agents that had trained to assimilate into American life.
Starting point is 00:12:34 And they were sent here with fake identities. They mean, they were identities that essentially were taken from like a dead baby or something like that. And then they would show up someplace at some point in the past. And then they would settle in. They would have jobs that would afford them some access to something that would be beneficial for the Russian government to, you know, gain access to. And then they would have families. the kids would be natural born American citizens. They would be posing as Americans.
Starting point is 00:13:04 And the whole time that they're here, they would be gathering information, doing bed drops, you know, just acting like spies, but then also carrying on their regular everyday American lives. And the concept of it is just fascinating to me. Like, because a Russian accent is not the easiest thing to cover up. Like, if you grew up speaking Russian, natively to be able to train yourself to speak like an American, I would imagine it would be pretty difficult.
Starting point is 00:13:36 And these are people who were already adults who then went and did this. It's not like they were. Well, early adults, you know, young adults. But yeah, they didn't come here at like, you know, in their teens or something like that. And I don't know how many years they trained them in Russia before they sent them here. But, I mean, the illegals that the FBI caught here in America, it was exactly like the plot of the Americans. I mean, they had children. There were a number of them who had families together. And when they kicked the illegals out, I mean, the illegals obviously take their kids and they head back to Russia and they're heroes, essentially. Yeah, wow.
Starting point is 00:14:18 Yeah, I'm fascinated by spy dramas. And I remember when I was not when I was younger, obviously I was younger, but like maybe 10 years ago, I'd watch those. And I've always been into conspiracies. I've always believed that the world was way more orchestrated than they lead us to believe. Sure. Man, the way that these things are lining up with like our current day is just fascinating. Like I can't tell if it was predictive programming, if it was like karma clearing, what it was. But there was definitely some insight behind it when these shows were written. I think that one of the causal factors is certainly you're going to have a type of predictive programming. I think that whenever there is an event that will be like especially massaged, like a major op, like 9-11, you know, I mean, everybody points to the lone gunman show where they basically had the plot of 9-11 before 9-11. Like an instance like that, I think it's seated in like popular culture prior to so that if you do go to research the actual event later, you will end up coming to information like that. And so, you know, then people can say plausibly, oh, you know, you're just, you're remembering this, you know, TV show. It has nothing to do with a conspiracy that might be what you're thinking of.
Starting point is 00:15:44 What was that movie that during COVID people were talking about? It was a movie or I think it was a TV show that actually had a coronavirus outbreak that used hydroxychloroquine as a treatment. That was the, it was a thousand three or four or something. Yeah, Anthony Michael Hall with, it was based on a Stephen King story. Hang on. Yeah, what was it called? I mean, that was so on the nose because it was. It's one of those types of things.
Starting point is 00:16:14 okay, what are the odds? The dead zone? The dead zone. That's right. What are the odds in the act? Like that was just a random thing. I don't know. It just seems too out there to be totally random. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:28 I think that that one was definitely done on purpose. And I mean, I know this type of thing gets bounced around a fair amount, but what's the purpose of doing that? Is it to brag? Is it, you know, what benefit is there 20, almost 20 years prior to the actual event,
Starting point is 00:16:46 what benefit is there in seeding out something like that into the... It makes the event plausible when it happens. Okay. Because then they were, oh, like, oh, my God. Do you remember that episode of the dead? The couple of people that will. Others won't remember the episode of the dead zone, but then they'll hear this and they'll be like,
Starting point is 00:17:04 oh my God, a killer COVID virus. Now, hydroxychloroquine... Yeah, with like the therapeutics being used too. Yeah. And that stuff's been going on forever, too. And I mean, to the point where people were seeing it from the angle of like, oh, they're giving the bad guys ideas, you know. I remember hearing that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:24 That's what I mean. My parents would always say that. Oh, good. Now we're going to see this happen because they're planting these seeds for bad guys to to imitate. So there's kind of that angle, too. I think that that's, yeah, that's obviously super gay. Like anything that people, most things that people are thinking about are like writing for. entertainment purposes, they've got their own writer's rooms, okay?
Starting point is 00:17:47 Like they've got teams working on, you know, like scenarios to play out and then contingencies for contingencies. So they've got all that stuff. They've already figured all of that out. Now, when you think about something like, say, Project Looking Glass, I think it's possible that maybe the dead zone might have had the insert from hydroxychloroquine as maybe an indicator of a possible therapeutic that could be used. And so maybe somebody would see that, oh, like, oh my gosh, they used hydroxychloroquine in the dead zone and it says it's a COVID virus.
Starting point is 00:18:19 So maybe that's something we could do. So it may have been like an insert from a future timeline. I'm excited. There's also a study around that time that chloroquine or something, which is part of the same family as hydroxychloroquine. It was used against like SARS or something to that effect. and I remember pulling up that information back during COVID and telling like, look, this stuff was used in studies for similar COVID-type symptoms, whatever COVID actually is. That's a whole other topic, obviously. But like that was 20 over, well, at that point, they've been 20 years earlier.
Starting point is 00:18:56 So it's not like that information is, it wasn't unknown as a potential treatment option. No, not at all. Not at all. No. Here's the question. Was there an active patent? at that time because if there was an active patent then it could have been monetizable as yes as as a medication that has come out of the patent phase it's available for anybody to produce as a generic and it's far more difficult to make money off of it right yeah what i miss goes everything Oh, much, man.
Starting point is 00:19:30 We were talking about the triple-decker Islamic fascist attack that took place this past week, and then thinking about the seeding. Yes, yes, sleeper cells. What do you think about sleeper cells, John? Well, I think they are very active. I always thought it's interesting how often Ezra Kohn Watnik talked about them, him and John Steinman. They talk about it all the damn time.
Starting point is 00:19:55 So, I don't know. But when I think sleeper cells, I don't think like just one random guy. No. Driving a truck into a synagogue. I expect something a little more, a little bigger, I guess. I would say so. Yeah, I mean, based on President Trump's suggestion that they are watching these sleeper cells and they know where they are, if they could have connected any of these three or even if they wanted to, then I think they could have very. very easily done it. And the fact that they haven't indicates more likely that we're just dealing with, you know, a couple of individuals.
Starting point is 00:20:33 Yeah. I mean, I think it's it's more likely. Yeah, they're just, you know, people will go a little crazy. They'll get very passionate about this or very pro-Iran or they're like New York Times readers and they get all riled up and, you know, and stuff like that's bound to happen. And I don't think you can prevent every one of those things from happening. Even if you had the all important DHS. funded right now. I don't think it would have prevented any of those. Yeah. Are you seeing the videos of how long the lines are at the airport? Yeah. Austin, it was like ridiculous. They said Austin it was like wrapping around outside the airport. And if they had like non-refundable tickets, they were just screwed. Like they, they're just hell. I definitely bought, I paid for the upgrade on, on my ticket to Nashville because I was like, you never know what's going to happen by that time. done mine yet but that's probably a good idea you haven't done mine either you think we'll get dhs funding by then no i don't well i mean after three possible islamo fascist attacks in one week uh
Starting point is 00:21:36 democrats are now i think feeling a little uh little pressure yeah a little nervous about the fact that they have kept dhs defunded i mean even if dhs wouldn't have caught any of these guys the insinuation is that they've caused this in which is of course why they're trying to say that it's Republicans that caused it, even though there's not even a single connection. So what I was saying while you were gone was that the resurgence of Mohammed Jala as the guy at Old Dominion, that was particularly interesting to me because he was a, you know, direct material support for ISIS. The Trump DOJ wanted to put him away for 20 years. He was only given like 10 years, I believe, by the judge.
Starting point is 00:22:20 So that's a failure of the judge. and then he was released early during the Biden administration, which is another failure of the justice system under a different administration. Failure or success? Excuse me? I said failure or success? Well, a success for the deep state. I mean, like, and here's the other wrinkle to it because I think normally anytime people are thinking about a false flag, you're thinking about like an evil government that is committing the false flag. But I clearly don't think that like the Trump administration would have orchestrated.
Starting point is 00:22:52 any of these events. But I think that they easily could have been orchestrated by, say, you know, a separate silo deep state window group within the government that's still operating. Because obviously the fourth branch of government is still huge, even though they've gotten rid of a lot of people. Yeah, wild. I wonder how bad it's going to get. Did you see we're sending the boat over to like a Navy vessel?
Starting point is 00:23:18 We're going to get that island out there or something? people are saying 200 Marines or something yeah yeah that's pretty wild too wait wait is that that carg island is that you're talking about in iran yeah people are saying we're going to get the carg island so so brian kill me just asked president trump about that and he bristled he was like you're so stupid i can't believe you'd even ask me about that like what kind of a person would answer that have they actually announced that that's the location of where we're going well no no no but it's just like everybody's like well obviously they're probably going to go do that because they just bombed the shit out of it today.
Starting point is 00:23:52 Okay. All right. Well, I mean, I just, when I heard about it, I figured it's probably going to be protection for cargo ships and oil bearing vessels that are going to be going through the Straits of Formoos. Yeah. I don't know. It'll be interesting to see if we actually get boots on the ground over there
Starting point is 00:24:08 or not. Lindsay Cramble freaking blow a load of each. The guy already did. So dehydrogen. He already blew one load, man. I know. He's just running. He's shooting blanks. Yeah, exactly. Dry yeast.
Starting point is 00:24:23 You get old, things happen. Matt, tell us about your experiences, brother. It takes a while. I could tell you how to do a good Russian accent if you want. This was up earlier. When I was at Georgetown, and I was learning Russian, they said, the secret to do a Russian accent, because you were talking about difficulty of getting rid of it.
Starting point is 00:24:48 And to do a Russian accent, the key to good Russian accent is that you have to fall in tone at the end of every sentence. You have to talk like this. So, yeah, I'm Russian. I'm living in the United States. You have to go down. And it sounds really weird to us. But if you're speaking a Russian, the way we speak in Russian to a Russian sounds like we're always frantic. We're always like, why are you so crazy?
Starting point is 00:25:12 And so to be a Russian in the U.S. and to pass as American like you were talking about, you have to make yourself sound a little bit crazy and manic all the time to your own yeah well give me a Russian accent then let me hear it well you talk like this so John how are you doing today are you doing okay you you were away for a while why did you go away you know you do that you just sort of go down in tone nice it makes everything sound like a casual threat yeah I guess you. Yeah, we got to get you like into alpha mode and put you in like a Boris Badenoff costume or something. Right, right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:56 Just be rushing the entire show. It would be cool. Hey, guys. Clark, Clarkson B said in the chat is asked for prayers for his mom. She's 88 years old. We broke her leg. Oh, gosh. Yeah, definitely, bro. prayers. Fares, man. That's awful. Yeah. I hope for speed. 88 years old.
Starting point is 00:26:17 Yeah. Some good genetics there. Yeah. My grandmother's turning 95 in a couple weeks. Oh, you just had one up. No, I'm not one and up. I'm just saying because it's a lead into I was going to fly out to Jackson, Mississippi. My mom and my dad, my brother driving out there. I was going to fly out there.
Starting point is 00:26:34 But I'd have to find other plans. It's been on Atlanta airport. It just made me think about it. Dang. Oh, on the Russian, yeah, 95 is good. She's born in 31. But I was wondering, what do Arabic people sound or people that speak Arabic sound like to Russians? Because if we sound frantic, they sound frantic to me.
Starting point is 00:26:52 I can't even imagine how much they're like freaking out and they hear some of young. Chinese people are. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Chinese, yeah. That's a harsh thing. I know that the Sudanese guys I worked with, they said that I talked too fast when they were trying to understand my English, which is funny. It's like, you guys are like racing through your language.
Starting point is 00:27:11 What do you mean I'm talking too fast, but like anyone struggling to learn a language? We don't want you to understand us though. Yeah. In Sudan. Okay. I guess all languages, Jonathan, all languages I've heard they have the same amount of information per second in their communication.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Some languages require a lot more syllables to get that information across. So they sound like they're talking really fast, you know, the tic-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick-tick like this. And some languages don't, but they've done studies. It's like the same rate of information is a constant across all of human societies and language. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:47 That is an interesting thought. Language is fascinating. I wish I was more of a language. The polyglit, polyglot. People that can speak lots of different languages, that would be awesome. Did you take any language classes in high school? Me?
Starting point is 00:28:05 Yeah. No. Spanish or anything? No, I mean, kind of by osmosis, my grandfather was fluent in Spanish and he tried to be. Hey, Ash. Yeah, my foreign language came. Like, when I was in Sudan, I just started learning it.
Starting point is 00:28:18 And I became conversationalally fluent while I was there. But I've lost it as then. You can't speak any Sudanese? Well, it's Arabic. I mean, embarrassing. Yeah. Salamu, like,
Starting point is 00:28:29 Is it me, Jonathan? Hefalak, ahmdhounduil. She kissed me, Jonathan? He did sound like that. No, thanks. A weird language, man. I've heard that about that. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:28:40 Yeah. What is your name, you know? Is that the region where are the guys sleeping? in tents together and they go on retreats. No, that's India, isn't it? Well, I do know that while I was there, a guy in South Sudan got arrested for relating with his goat
Starting point is 00:28:56 and then his punishment was he was forced to legally marry it. Oh, my God. What? That's not a punishment. I know. It's like, dude, you're like giving him what he's at. Dude, this is my plan all along. Now I don't have to hide it. Yeah, I know. Okay.
Starting point is 00:29:11 And then if you get divorced, the goat gets half of your stuff. that's a lot. Oh man, he gets a hot, wonderful. Oh my gosh. That's the weird, why would they make him marry the goat? That doesn't make sense. They were jealous. Inshallah, Jonathan, and so this is, this is funny about, inshallah, if you guys are familiar with that, like you see that in movies, you know, someone says something like, inshalla, that means as God wills.
Starting point is 00:29:42 Like if God willing, that'd be like, if Christian verse, version of I'll see you, you know, I'm going to go to Gart in three and a half, four weeks, God willing. The way they use it is more of an out for having to actually do anything. Right. Like if pigs could fly. Right. So I was involved in food distributions and stuff. And so I'd be going around a meeting with trucking companies to bring the food out to the refugee camps that we were working in and be like, okay, I need the food there on Thursday. And the driver would be like, ah, I It would be there Thursday, inshallah. And you learned that inshallah means it's, you know, if it's God's will, I have no intention of making it happen on Thursday. Yes. And if it doesn't happen, well, that was God's will. So I got in the habit of being like, no, no, no, not God's will, your will.
Starting point is 00:30:29 Let's make it happen. And my friend, I was like, I can't say that. That's, that's inappropriate. Like, tell them. You need to tell them that. So it's inshalla, you know, yeah, it's not going to happen. That's so funny. So do you guys know who Lord Miles is?
Starting point is 00:30:43 No. Okay. He's a British explorer guy that I had on my show one time. And he was, he was in Saudi Arabia. He was doing a 40-day fast out in the desert in Saudi Arabia. And there were people that started betting on him on Polly Market if he was to finish the 40-day fast. And then people obviously betting against him. And one of the people who had bet against him called the Saudi Arabian police, docks his location and said that he was engaging in terrorist support. report. And so the Saudi Arabian police came and arrested him and took him to a black site. And he didn't have access to a phone. And he was in an awful, awful jail cell with a, you know, a shithole in the bottom of the floor. And everybody, nobody spoke English, didn't get access to a phone or any of his stuff. He had a cat. They just left his cat in the middle of the desert. Spoiler alert, it starved to death. And, and he said that while he was there and he was being interrogated by the Saudi Arabian police, he said the exact. same thing he was like you know if saudi arabian police tell say inshallah it means like it's definitely not happening because it you know it's god's will but they're not going to do anything to me like oh yeah we'll get you in touch with the british embassy inshallah tomorrow and he's like yeah yeah so that not going to happen not going to happen it was so so what was the bet the bet was well so the bet was whether or not he was going to make it through the 40 day water fest and i believe
Starting point is 00:32:09 it was like the 22nd day and he was live streaming himself 24 hours a day so that everybody day water fast yes a 40 day water fast I guess that he got a little chubby and so he was trying to see if he could do it oh he's drinking water just water for 40 days fasting from water for no fuck no he wouldn't last 72 hours because some people thought the same thing and so they bet big money against him and uh once it got past three days they were like oh no but so maybe they were really pissed off when they were really pissed off when they were realized what the true bet was. So did they pay out?
Starting point is 00:32:47 I don't know what happened with the polymarket bet. It's a huge scandal. And there are people who say that Miles faked the whole thing. Initially, he just like went missing. And obviously he didn't have access to his Twitter anymore. And he was totally out of communication. The live stream shut down. And, and he, but it was eventually confirmed.
Starting point is 00:33:08 He really was in a Saudi Arabian prison for a couple of months. And, um, but. But still, there was a wallet that someone connected to him, which showed a $60,000 bet against him before anybody figured out exactly what had happened to him. He bet against himself? Well, no, people are suggesting he bet against himself. He says that he had a local guide, like an assistant that had access to all of his stuff. He was like paying him a salary. and this guy is supposed to be the one that gave the Saudi Arabian police his location.
Starting point is 00:33:45 Allegedly, some people that had bet against him figured out who this guy was, reached out to him and said, we will pay you X amount of dollars if you make sure that Miles does not complete this fast. And then so he was like, okay, I'll take the $10,000. And then he used Miles' wallet to bet $60,000 against him. And then, and that's wild. You say it, John, I think that they did pay out because, you know, he definitely didn't make it. One more question.
Starting point is 00:34:15 Did you guys see all the paid promotions for Kalshian and Polly Market today? No, it did. Finally become legal in the U.S.? Well, no, I'm just saying that like D.C. Drano and the Wall Street Mavs and breaking or leading report or whatever, all of them reposting polymarket stuff. And then underneath it on Twitter, it's listed paid partnership on all those posts. So that's super guy. Having a polymarket bot is the new American dream. Polymarket bot.
Starting point is 00:34:49 Yeah, you can have like a bought on Claude code that runs a polymarket thing, looks at markets, follows whales, follows bets, you know, finds a winning strategy. That's the new American dream as far as I can tell. Yeah. People make money the American dream is. That's that's the dream how adaptable it is. That's what are you been up to? Why were you like?
Starting point is 00:35:11 Because, well, true deplorable just said all shows are why we vote now. I had like three different Republican voting related struggle sessions today. Explain yourself. Great show. Great show with Marissa. No, I'm not even talking about the show. Oh. Well, that was a great show with Marissa.
Starting point is 00:35:31 She's amazing, isn't she? Yeah. The show was great. It was not a struggle session. But I was asked to join a campaign today, to run a campaign today. Why the hell aren't you a Republican? You need to join the party so we can change the party. Like, it's...
Starting point is 00:35:49 People want you to run for office or just run... Oh, people want me to fix the problems for them. Because I say the true things, they think that that's the answer is that the person that says the true things needs to fix the things. instead of them realizing that the things are true and actually like getting to fix the things. I'm starting to feel like voting might actually be preventing from moving forward. Yeah, that's what we've been saying. That's into my good ear. Don't say that too loud.
Starting point is 00:36:20 No, that's getting clipped out. No, you come back and apologize for what you've done. Both John's faces lit up. I know. I thought about not coming to the show tonight. I can't wait to show that to Chris. My fourth struggle session of the day. Let's go.
Starting point is 00:36:44 Do it. G money is going to love that clip too. Oh, we've got some great traction. See what you've done, Republicans? You're done fucked up. That's good, though. Being running for office is definitely not the answer. Can you imagine the opo research?
Starting point is 00:37:00 of like just watching badlands just the real you i mean you own all of that stuff ash yeah yeah so you know it it would probably make for some entertaining ads and you you can like film an ad of yourself watching it be like that's right faggot i'll say it again eat a bag of dicks if you don't like it yeah you want to fix shit then let's fucking go i do like that vote for me or eat a bag of dicks yeah yeah i think it's a good one what uh office would you run for running profit. If hypothetically speaking, if elections weren't the problem, election's big. So, yeah. Prove it.
Starting point is 00:37:40 Prove it, Ash. No, stop. Stop. I'm certainly not announcing a campaign on OnlyLans. Why not? That's the Daily Herald or Pallel is Daily. If anybody runs for office, they have to announce on OnlyLands. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:37:56 It's like only appropriate. But tell what office would you hypothetically run for? Um, or what office were you asked to run for? I wasn't asked to run for an office in the political sense, but in the party. Like you need to, you need to be part. So the party chair here just resigned. Nobody asked me to run, but it was implied that I should be involved in that. Now I'm not a Republican and I'm the most critical person of Republicans in the state.
Starting point is 00:38:21 Because it's very much a uniparty dynamic. They don't really even fuck with each other. They just argue amongst themselves within their factions and their parties. Yeah, that's all the more reason for you to join the. Republican Party. But it would just end it. Yeah, well, that's fine. I mean, like, what they have right now is not serving the people.
Starting point is 00:38:39 Yeah. I mean, it's right for the, you know, commandeering, you know, you can just take. I have time for any of this. I just remember we had that conversation about running for your HOA and taking it over. This would be just like. I know you don't. I know you, but this was something that we talked about when we were talking about
Starting point is 00:38:57 H.O.A's one night. You know, you and a few of your neighbors could form. form an HOA and make all the other neighbors be part of it. And if they don't like it, you could just tax them. That's right. No, I don't want any of that. You didn't vote for the HOA? That's your fault.
Starting point is 00:39:12 Now you owe us taxes. You should have voted. The vote harder microcosm community and the Gtopia one set them side by side, set of cameras and watch. Do like a six to 12 month experiment because I think they will both break down after that. I'll watch it. I figured it out. They both abandon their positions and become the other side. We need to create a political party, the Badlands Party,
Starting point is 00:39:38 where our campaign is entirely based on telling people not to vote. Like, don't vote for me. Please don't vote at all. Don't. Don't do it. Everything sucks and see how much traction we would get. And then the writing campaign, right in drawing dicks on the line instead of writing in the name, I think that, I think that gets attraction too.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Valid design. You can change your name to a symbol, right? Yeah. It doesn't have to be words. It can be making a picture. John Drake, though, I think that we are on the right track based on what John Harold just said for our SideQuest project.
Starting point is 00:40:17 I think we are on the right track. What's that? I can't tell you right now. Well, that much bring it up. You can't do that. I hate it because it's a tease for Gart. Have you talked about Gart yet? I don't like surprises.
Starting point is 00:40:28 No, it's not going to be a surprise for you at guard. We're not going to ruin. We're not going to ruin this. It's not going to impact Mrs. Bright. We're not going to ruin the list of tasks that we came up with for her to do this afternoon. You did not come up for the list of that. Whose fucking sight are you on? He's on the side of anarchy.
Starting point is 00:40:45 Yeah, anarchy chaos. I've got the wind. Well, you know we're doing a jury experience. Yeah, it's going to turn into a murder mystery. It's going to be. This is bright. It's going to kill somebody. This is bright did it.
Starting point is 00:40:56 It's easy. Hang on. It started as a murder mystery. We were killing ghosts so we could call him the ghost of the ghost of base Patrick Henry. We're not doing that anymore. Yeah, but we still call him that. We can still kill him off if you want. It's not a core part of the central experience.
Starting point is 00:41:13 We could take that picture of him where he's passed out and easily like transform that into a corpse. Easily frame a little bit of Photoshop magic. Did you see the one with Tiny Bray on Ghosts? No. I haven't seen it. No. So I'm sure you guys have all heard about this Benjamin Netanyahu might be dead thing. No, I have not heard about people being retarded, though. It is totally retarded. I just found this tweet where it says it's a picture of a guy speaking in front of a bunch of rubble in Israel. And the tweet says breaking this person claims that a major attack took place at Benjamin Netanyahu's home. And there's a fear that he may have been killed due to collapsing debris. It's being claimed that Israel and the U.S. are covering up this news, which is why it's being. said that they will lose the war and then at the very end of the show of the video it zooms in and it's benjamin net yahoo walking along with some other people in the video so he's clearly
Starting point is 00:42:09 not dead in the video where they're claiming that he's dead yet i was about to say why i feel happy i'll go back you're programming you're going to show the video it's not a video oh is there a video i don't know if you're talking to me i'm pulling in an image i was waiting for her yeah i was just filling filling in time while she was looking for it oh my god he looks like a marionette mouth like there's like just lines right here Why is hands two different sizes? It's perspective, John. One of them is closer.
Starting point is 00:43:00 I'll do it. Wow. That was spectacular. Arm is like 10. That's great. That should be a next year's calendar. Yeah, for sure. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:43:13 Which somebody in the chat said, we got to get that roll on soon. We really do. We're already three months into the year. No, I think the next one ends in April. The last one we did. Yes, somebody said that in chat. People were killed. Okay, so here is the video.
Starting point is 00:43:28 Right now in one of the locations that was attacked, you can see just behind me, Prime Minister Veneman Netanyahu, who has visited this place. This is one of the locations where a deadly attack took place. Nine people were killed, and they were, in fact, more than 25 who were injured out here. You could see Netanyahu, in fact, visiting this particular location. There he is. Right there. And that's him right there. Okay.
Starting point is 00:43:55 So like I don't understand like what this dude was doing when he writes breaking this person claims. He doesn't claim that at all. And Benjamin, he, first thing he says is right minister Benjamin Netia who is walking right behind me. So I don't, I don't know. Are we sure that? Jim Carrey on a mask. Yeah, you know what? I'm not sure.
Starting point is 00:44:17 I'm not sure of anything at this point, Jonathan. Maybe it's the ghost of Benjamin Netanyahu. are people so damn stupid there's a lot of retardation right now people are retarding so bad you think this is false flag stupidity like you know this is Mossad actually doing this to actually create oh god narrative confusion that's actually not a bad idea you're like you know let's just sew a whole bunch of discord by putting out the rumor that bb's alive but then we'll just also put out a bunch of stuff showing him actually being alive They're like, hey, mass confusion.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Contradictory things. Such a great off. Are they going to come out tomorrow with like a cardboard BB? Oh my God. That's how we'll know it's real. He's definitely alive. I think we know it's real from President Trump posting we video game videos of the destruction. That's wild, man.
Starting point is 00:45:17 Don't tell people this war isn't real, though, because they get real fucking upset. like really like this it's all question to the panel is is the hysterical reaction about calling war propaganda war propaganda better worse or the same as ukraine russia say it one more time yeah what do you mean calling out you're out on the internet right or here certain people and you call out that the the war propaganda is war propaganda is the reaction that you will get from Twitter or your, you know, non-fake believing friends, better, worse, or the same than the Ukraine-Russia conflict. Well, that was a really poorly phrased question, I think.
Starting point is 00:46:10 I'm still hazy. You don't understand what you. I'll answer. I mean, Cam gets it. I'm from the baseline, understanding what propaganda is, a video posted by president. I think you say I think this is fake I don't think you know like we this this war is fake right like oh I don't think that video is real the ghost of Kiev days of the Ukraine war versus the shit that we're dealing with now that was a reaction that you're getting to calling that shit out is it better worse of the same than Russia and Ukraine I think it's worse yeah it's definitely worse but like it's because people oh go ahead Cam sorry the one thing I will say though is the left was the one that was freaking out about the Ukraine one when we said it was fake and I feel like this is the right and I frequent on the internet my circle or at least the feed is more of right leaning or at least conservative people so I hear that
Starting point is 00:47:06 louder and I know when Russia invaded Ukraine the neocon Republicans lost their fucking shit and anybody who shared an RT article was instantly a Russian propagandist so that's kind of what the measurement that I'm that I'm playing with. Yeah, definitely worse though. It's not, it's not, you know, like mountains worse. It's worse now. But it's like, we haven't moved. We haven't moved it all.
Starting point is 00:47:33 I think it's a little different too because it's like the U.S. isn't directly involved. And I think some people get a little, a little too attached to their team, you know. Plus Trump is involved. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:47 Yeah. It complicates things a lot. It's a lot easier to accept that, you know, someone on the other side of the world they're throwing propaganda out there but like trump's propaganda is just it's so like crazy over the top like those sports videos he has right where they're like like the baseball one i saw the other day where you're hitting home runs and it's like bombs dropping yeah it's it's i mean people are like is this in poor taste or is it just funny like i don't know i don't want to make of it i think it's both yeah
Starting point is 00:48:22 It is definitely both. I think that's obviously very intentional, which is like it's so trump, you know. It's forcing people to utter the concept. If it's fake, then like it's okay. But if it's real, that's in poor taste. Right. I guarantee you most people that are saying that probably have never even had that thought before. Right.
Starting point is 00:48:44 That's true. That's an interesting way to look at it. They really tell me. I told his son. Is that true? I mean, as much as we know anything's true. The cardboard or at Tola? That he's disfigured in a coma or something like that.
Starting point is 00:49:01 He's not dead? Not dead. Call it a comeback, Zach. I'd like to, I can't wait to see him like, you know, walking on stage with that one wooden leg. Just hobbling out there. The robes billowing behind him like Darth Vader or something. That would be kind of funny if Trump signs a peace deal with him.
Starting point is 00:49:22 he goes and like you'd have the picture of them shaking hands and he's like missing an arm and you can't like he's just like shakes the numb i'll just like i'm just like hi-five he's like that's a very cool scar oh sorry bro yeah we need a we need a meta poly market for what news turns out to be fake and what sort of what news turns out to be real who who the german's at though yeah i was going to say we'll never know yeah no bets would ever pay off but exactly that's fake grock knows crock knows all yeah well other news john's uh john's football team pretty much won the super bowl yeah did you see that nope we got coli marina i saw the message in the chat but i have no idea what that means why you guys were hearting it and laughing about it it makes
Starting point is 00:50:14 no sense to me you'll be sorry i'm not mediocre at best quarter we have the best quarterback we have the best quarterback in the league now in the Vikings we are I don't see how we lose a single game this year is there a reason to even have a season then I don't think so well like $50 million to just not have play for them this year exactly the quarterback's only half the game right I mean like you throw the ball but somebody's got to catch it well they already have the best wide receiver yeah they do have the best wide receiver well I don't know when he runs when he runs he takes off he looks like a little toddler going to look like tiny bright he runs he runs like he runs like he runs like he runs like bright he's little the Vikings don't have an offensive line but that's why this is such a good signing because he's so small and shifty you can't catch them you don't need an offensive line with them low center of gravity John that's what it is you know that's what it is did the Vikings often win Super Bowls John very often almost every year it's zero to number one one they did lose they did manage to lose like four of them in the 70s which I think was quite
Starting point is 00:51:21 an accomplishment or three. We got shafted on Brett Farr's year. Yeah, that was your year. That was when I first became comfortable with the idea that the NFL was rigged because they clearly wanted the Saints to be in the Super Bowl because come back through Hurricane Katrina.
Starting point is 00:51:41 Absolutely. And I remember Farr posted a picture after the game and like his whole side was one giant bruise. He got so brutalized. And they were so few roughing the pass or calls. They, they just beat the crap out of him. And it was obvious the roughs were letting that happen because they wanted the saints. That was my, my takeaway anyway.
Starting point is 00:52:04 I mean, I don't follow football and I thought the same thing. Yeah, yeah. Some stories are just too good, you know. Yeah. Yeah, that was good. Oh, by the way, speaking of football, I just wanted to point out Joey Bosa, super-based, will not sign. He's a free agent right now. will not sign with a sanctuary city team.
Starting point is 00:52:24 Really? I like that. Very cool. Wow. So what? So what are his options then? I mean, like, he's not going to another country.
Starting point is 00:52:33 He's retiring. Jacksonville, Miami, Tampa Bay. I think there's like probably Tennessee, maybe. I don't know. There's like a half of the teams. I don't realize he was a free agent. Wasn't he hurt last year or something? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:48 He was, he's always hurt. he's great when he can play but he's he's also like one giant muscle like he is literally just like a walking muscle yeah yeah so you're comparing to me a lot yeah oh john before you left i asked if we had any ads so i should probably remind us oh yeah we do i could probably do that did you guys say that president trump called maggie haberman maggot haberman yeah a new name a new name well he's called her that before has he i I don't remember it, but I don't remember that one. It's been a while, so yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:23 He's picked on her, right? He's definitely picked on her. He's definitely singled her out before, but. I don't know, but it's been a while. Like, that was way back in the day. That was like one of his favorite punching bags. Yeah. Hey, I'm going to do our ad spot real quick.
Starting point is 00:53:36 We got Tamarack Gardens and then soft disclosure. Spring has sprung at Tamarack Garden. Time for your body to bloom with pure plant-powered magic. Kick off your spring glow up with their best-selling detox collection that lovingly supports your kidneys liver and themphatic system, flushing out winter junk for fresh energy clarity and that vibrant spring vibe. Then hit the sun safely.
Starting point is 00:53:57 Their nourishing sunscreen packed with skin-loving plants and natural SPF, tinted with cocoa for instant golden glow, no white residue, just radiant you. Protect against mosquitoes and ticks the natural way with their deep-free plant-powered bug spray, safe effect of family protection. The herbal lineup eases headaches, allergies, anxiety, and more all handcrafted by a fun family in North Idaho
Starting point is 00:54:17 since 2021 from local wild weeds and wildflowers. Reclaim your health one plant at a time with Tamarack Garden. Visit tamarackgarden.com and use promo code Badlands for $10 off in a $50 order. And they sure are a fun family. I'm excited to see them at Garding. But we also got some soft disclosure. Let's do this real quick. Legend says on St. Patrick's Day, a beard without oil is just a chin with ambition.
Starting point is 00:54:47 But a beard with soft disclosure. beard oil. That's true treasure. Spiced vanilla, naked, smooth as a lepracons getaway plan. Soft enough to impress your barber, bold enough to confuse a baby goat. And this bore bristlebrush tames your beard like it owes the crown coin. Every bottle is American made, which means when you buy soft disclosure, you're supporting six American small businesses. That's not luck. That's capitalism and with cheek bones. And while you're at it, try our mint green deodorant because even legends need fresh pits.
Starting point is 00:55:23 Soft Disclosure, go for gold. Visit softdisclosure.com and use promo code tiny bright of 15% off. These things have been evaluated by the FDA. Promocco does not apply. That's so funny. I know. When is St. Patrick's Day?
Starting point is 00:55:40 It's the 17th. Tuesday. Oh. New day. Sweet. That's cool. Everybody got their beard. Jonathan, where's your brush,
Starting point is 00:55:51 Oh, where's your brush? J-J-J-J, where's your beard, bro? I don't have a brush. Here it is. Beard has been.
Starting point is 00:55:59 Ash? Does not have a beautiful. You're muted. You're failing again, Ash. Fucking theme of the week. So, the brushes are
Starting point is 00:56:10 back-corded again because they keep flying off the show. As they should. They are the best beard brush. Can't kill enough fours fast enough, huh?
Starting point is 00:56:19 All right. Yeah, you can. They can shave the bore. Excellent way of selling the brushes, Jay. Oh, really well done. You know, it's your mom put you up to this, didn't she? Freak and Marty put you up to this. She's doing, by the way.
Starting point is 00:56:34 He's just off camera. Margie's 17 next Sunday. So happy birthday to her. Absolutely. Happy birthday. Mom and dad were born in the same, they were born the same week in the same hospital and the same maternity ward for a couple of days before my mom went home. Wow.
Starting point is 00:56:56 And then they went to grade school together. And then they didn't. My dad moved to California and they didn't really know each other. But then my dad went to dental school back in Buffalo and then he stayed there. And my mom, they were both raised in Rochester. So yeah. So then my dad became a dentist. My mom was trying to get into the convent.
Starting point is 00:57:19 She wanted to be a nun, but she had been a dental hygienist up till then. So she went to Europe, spent all her money because she didn't need money anymore, comes back to sign up for the convent and they tell her, oh, there's like a year waiting list to get in. Because in those days, apparently it was quite the popular profession. So anyway, she's like, oh, man, I got to go back to work. So my dad ended up hiring her and they ended up getting married the same day my mom was supposed to go into the convent. Wow.
Starting point is 00:57:47 I can't believe they turned people away. Yeah, back in those days. It's in the 60s. Yeah, it's a very different time. Catholicism had a much greater stranglehold on the American psyche back then. People were lining up for the convent and going into
Starting point is 00:58:03 the priesthood. Yep. Now they've got to recruit. Yeah. Yeah. So, but yeah, that's their story and they're both turning 87 in the next couple weeks. You said Sunday, right? Is it a birthday? Not this one, but the following. 20 seconds.
Starting point is 00:58:17 Oh, okay. As I said, my grandmother's is on Monday. What should we get them? Beard brush, probably for my mom. Soft disclosure products, I was going to say. By the way, Ash, she was so thrilled because she did get some soft disclosure. Oh, good. And you know what she said to me? She said, I love the products, but the best part was the note from Ash because you had said.
Starting point is 00:58:40 That's sweet. She's a nice. She's so sweet. Such a good sport, let us use her in the advertisements. Oh, yes. She's not used to being, yeah, she's not used to being the villain. So it took her a little, little used to it. No, that's got to be fun for her.
Starting point is 00:58:56 Oh, it's totally fun for her. Yeah. Do you guys see the Grim Reaper meme that was made of it? A grim Reaper meme was so funny. I go, mom, you've been, you've been memed. She's like, what does that mean? She's like, she's like Denzell in Training Day. You know, that one role where we're finally play the villain, and everyone's like Oscar.
Starting point is 00:59:18 Oscar yes yeah the meme was really really funny because I guess we've lost a couple beards right we well mine this is making a comeback but he started growing it back well this the maggie haberman thing yes um maggot mcgott josh read too did he yeah i think josh got afraid of madame march yeah i think honestly it's three beards now madame margie has uh Did we ever establish what the consequences were for not shaving? I never heard that. I don't want to know.
Starting point is 00:59:54 You're just going to have to roll the dice. That's what I'm doing. You'll find out, Jonathan. If I ever bring Matt and Margie to a guard, you will call out. Yeah. My attempts that grow up. There is. That's so great.
Starting point is 01:00:20 Didn't I hear her little laugh. That's good stuff. So what else happened? What is what? It is. Fraud. He ran $600 million worth of Medicare bills through. Who?
Starting point is 01:00:45 A doctor in Nevada. Yeah, so he, this is a matter. I have no idea this was even going on. Yeah. Nothing to do with it. They just used his license and, and, you know, got a hold of his license and 600 million or 76,000 claims under his license. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:03 Like, what a good sport. I mean, he spoke to the news about it. Yeah. Like, yeah, this is not me. He's like, I have nothing to do with any of these claims. He's like, I don't even bill Medicaid. Yeah. It's so he says I don't bill Medicaid or anything.
Starting point is 01:01:15 So, yeah. Yeah. But I remember, you know, when I first got a chiropractic school 30 years ago, I was interning with this doctor in Glendale. And Glendale has a very, very large Armenian population. In fact, the largest outside of the Middle East and Armenia itself is Glendale, California. And not disparaging any group of people, but they are kind of known for being a little shady. You know, even the Armenian people know their people are known for being kind of shady. And so aren't the Kardashians Armenian?
Starting point is 01:01:47 Yes. Okay. That's not the end of the name. Got it. I'll make sense. Yeah. So there was an office. We were in like a medical office building and there was another chiropractic office
Starting point is 01:01:58 right across the hall. And people would come in and they would like leave like 10 seconds later like patients. You know, and I was kind of naive. I was fresh out of school and I asked the doctor because the doctor I worked for is a great doctor, totally not shady at all. And he's like, Oh, yeah, he's like, it's a mill. Like they're just having people come in, sign in, and then leave,
Starting point is 01:02:20 and then they're billing out whatever they're doing. You know, it was either personal injury or Medicaid or something. Like a Somali daycare, but for me. It was basically like a Somali daycare like chiropractic center. So one day I'm like working on a patient and we get raided by the FBI. Like FBI comes in the office like guns ablazing. And I was like, holy crap, like, what the hell's going on? And the doctor that I worked for, he goes, oh, you want the office across the hall.
Starting point is 01:02:53 And they looked and they're like, oh, yeah, you're right. They went over there and took out like boxes of files and everything else. And they were like closed down the next day. But yeah, so like this has been going on for a very, very, very, very long time. And that was three decades ago. So it didn't surprise me when I, you know, heard this story. but it's it's funny that I like mainstream media is actually reporting on it CBS reported on it so yeah hopefully more exposure is good and we'll see what is done about it I'd like to see
Starting point is 01:03:26 almost like that's what these programs were created for almost almost imagine m2S says never small never fall asleep while listening to bad land trust me I'm guessing that has to do with writing candidates. Probably mostly on Friday night. Yeah. So is soft disclosure going to come out with hair products as well? We have a beard product. Are we going to have hair products?
Starting point is 01:03:58 Yeah, I mean, you can put the beard oil in your hair. I do that sometimes. Also, the goat's milk lotion is great for flyaways. People on why we vote tonight were like, your hair looks like silk. What did you do to it? And I had, did I wash it first of all? Yeah. But then I like smooth the flyways.
Starting point is 01:04:14 So goat smoke lotion. possibly in the future not currently on the road map far as I'm aware and I'm telling you I've been using the beard oil consistently on my face like every day and it just feels like I have brand new skin like my face feels like a baby's ass I should send you a gooshaw maybe if you don't have a beard to brush what is the goose shot me what lymphatic drainage oh and also it's like so the Jackie has a video up on soft disclosure dot com And it is Jackie shows you basically give yourself a neck massage with it. Like it's like a multi-purpose health and wellness.
Starting point is 01:04:55 I like it. That's also kind of a luxury. It's not the word I'm looking for. Accessory. Is it a stone? Is that what it is? Yeah. I have one.
Starting point is 01:05:10 Do you have one? Yeah. I am a big fan of lymphatic drainage massage. It's really good. stuff. It's, I mean, it's huge. Like, not in my huge. It's good. It's big for your, for your health to drain that. Because most people don't, like throughout their whole life, it's just clogged up. Yeah. You don't want that. No. Clogged is not good. No. It's big it flown.
Starting point is 01:05:38 He wants me to tell the, tell the, uh, coxics adjustment story again. I think that's run its course. Yeah, I don't want to hear about your finger up people's asses. I need a neck adjustment. and i will see you in a month dude i need to work this time you need the the one treatment miracle it happens occasionally i'll give him an upgraded neck adjustment this yeah okay if you could if you pull that up hold back this time i'll absolutely i spilled water all over my keyboard and i'm where it broke it. I hate that. Usually coffee for me, which is all sticking.
Starting point is 01:06:16 I've done that before. It's the worst. Man, but this is probably the longest I've had a keyboard. So it was bound to happen eventually. Hey, so Ash, question for you. I just caught like a headline on this story, but I didn't read the whole thing. But like Tina Peters is not guilty of assaulting
Starting point is 01:06:35 that person that assaulted her. That was a that was overturned on appeal. Yeah. Okay. And that was it was. It was so it was she she kicked a cop, but it, um, so there's a video of that, but she always said that she didn't like intend, she didn't like intend to resist. She was the way she was grabbed, it hurt her and she had an involuntary reaction was her, um, you know, reasoning for that. The, the way that her case was handled from a, you know, protection of rights criminal justice system standpoint is atrocious. There's and in the appeals, a bunch of the stuff that Brian and I, you know, we're not attorneys and we're covering the trial, knowing the facts of the case, but how they pertain to the law and, you know, those kinds of standards was muddy for, for both of us. But a lot of the stuff that we said in our trial coverage is what the appellate court said two years later.
Starting point is 01:07:35 Yeah. We were calling it in real time like, hey, the judge is being biased in front of the jury. Like, that's not cool. You can't do that. The judge is the authority. If they think that he thinks that she's guilty, that's going to bias them, right? There was other stuff, too. But there's, yeah, a bunch of due process violations that came out in the appellate hearing in February.
Starting point is 01:07:56 And when is the decision on that appellate hearing supposed to come down? No idea? Yeah. We don't get to know such things. Oh, okay. Whenever. It takes as long as it takes. As long as it takes.
Starting point is 01:08:07 And they can take their support. And the courts are. super backed up so it takes longer and why are the courts super backed up well because leftists and migrants are keeping all the taking all the time and resources on stupid shit and the reason that they don't that they can do that and that they keep doing it over and over again is that nobody ever gets in trouble for bringing frivolous bullshit into court they should yeah the courts and absolutely punish them we should demand that they do because they're it's our resources right anybody who's in court is like the first time why the why is this taking so long why why does it take so long to get
Starting point is 01:08:44 an answer on emotion to get well because they're backed up they're extremely backed up why are they backed up because they anybody can bring bullshit into court nobody ever gets in trouble when they do even when they know it's bullshit that should be punished every fucking time totally absolutely god you know i remember when the member when the duke lacrosse team was accused of like oh my raping those girls and and it was all bullshit and i bet what happened of those girls like were they punished for like literally ruining these guys reputations and lives forever they should get the same punishment that the guys were that's what i think that's long held position on people that women that make false rape allegations against men they should get the punishment that the the false allegations
Starting point is 01:09:25 that's what i think too i've always thought that and why that doesn't happen yeah there was a case i talked about not that long ago of a woman who accused a guy of rape and he was living in the another state, but the cops like went and got him and they prosecuted him without any real evidence other than her claims. He went to prison for like 10 years. She ended up marrying a deputy and working as the dispatcher at the sheriff's department and eventually came out and exonerated him. He was set free. I'm pretty sure he had a major lawsuit against the state after that. and I think that her punishment, even though the prosecution had asked for her to receive at least what was done to him, I'm pretty certain that they basically gave her probation. That's not justice.
Starting point is 01:10:15 Not at all. How do we fix the courts this match? Like what you were talking about, how, you know, how backed up it is, the bullshit that people bring and don't get in any trouble for it. How do we fix that problem? You're not going to like the answer, John. vote harder Congress the rules are so or your state legislature the rules at the
Starting point is 01:10:38 for the government of the court so the federal rules of civil procedure federal rules of evidence these rules they're set by the Congress I don't like that I know I'm sorry which means we all need to run for office the whole system's corrupt we do need to take up
Starting point is 01:10:58 well if we're going to stay you know, stay in the system. We all need to take over the system is, you know, we all need to be done. It's not even just the rules not getting followed and the rules, you know, being superfluous or stupid or not hard enough or not whatever. It's, it's, it's there's, there's so many of them. And they're, you know, again, the thing thing about the, the rules of procedure in court is that all of the attorneys break them. So nobody ever holds them accountable for breaking them because they all. break them unless the judge doesn't like the lawyers and then they'll get sanctioned still super rare though
Starting point is 01:11:36 like there it's a lot of like don't do don't do that again oh you did that again you rascal i'm i really made it this time don't do that again the witness the one witness that claimed any sort of intimidation in my case revealed on the stand admitted on the stand she only ever named us because the attorneys, the plaintiff attorney, the fucking NAACP's attorneys told her to name us to put down U.S. EIP, to say she was intimidated, to say that she identified as a Native American because her dad identified as a Native American, that wasn't in her original complaint. Oh, by the way, this had nothing to do with us. It's on the other side of the mountain range. It wasn't anything to do with us whatsoever. But the case went on for two and a half years until trial because halfway through when we had motion for summary judgment, the attorneys could.
Starting point is 01:12:28 convinced her to put down all the facts of their case in a declaration that it was us, that she was intimidated, all of these things. And she was lying. She did that during the motion for summary judgment? For summary judgment. That was how they beat summary judgment. And the judge said that in her final judgment. The court relied on Ms. Roberts' testimony, almost entirely in denying the defendant's motion for summary judgment. And it turns out that she only named us because the plaintiff attorneys told her to you know what happened fucking nothing we filed for our she denied our fees and said that there is nothing frivolous about this that is on appeal it's
Starting point is 01:13:09 case uh 25-1-1-1-1 yeah when does that get decided that one hasn't even been submitted to the court yet but what we're hoping is that when so the main appeal we won they appealed we did all of the briefing and everything of that and we're waiting for ruling that was actually submitted to the court on the briefs on November 18th. So it's been kind of in the pending stage since November 18th. The other one isn't even in anyone's radar yet, probably like another eight months before there's a notice in it, except it the ruling in the first one can moot the matter entirely if the
Starting point is 01:13:45 court does something. Wow. It's craziness. Yeah, I'm defending myself in that one too. I was actually admitted into the 10th circuit court to defend myself. The 251-1-1-1, there's attorney's court because I don't really have access to attorney's fees that's a lot of effort for no upside for me so no but that one the reason i'm a part of it at all is because as it's changing it's changing the um precedent the christiansburg
Starting point is 01:14:11 standard we're going to change that we're trying to change the christiansberg standard which is that um organizations like the nbacp get get uh presumption of good faith in court which is what she's yeah it's what she's in civil rights cases because litigating civil rights is just so important. It's really important and we don't want to chill it. Well, of course, white people don't have civil rights, I guess. It's not about the black thing. It's about being the plaintiff. It's about being the one that's bringing the, bringing the case, the civil rights case. So if you had a civil rights claim against the NAACP, would they legitimately look at you and give you the benefit of the doubt? In theory, the same standard would apply because it is the standard itself. I know, I know, I know.
Starting point is 01:14:54 But in theory, because the standard is about which party. It's about which party. And it's because if you're bringing a civil rights claim, the idea behind the standard is that you're generally bringing it against the government. Right. And so the odds are stacked against you. So you shouldn't have to pay the government's legal fees. That was the idea behind it. And it's been taken over, you know, it was this 1973.
Starting point is 01:15:15 I think that it became the standard. Since then, it's been, you know, expanded, of course, and applied to everything under the sun in the civil rights domain. to basically mean that the so you see all the all the leftist lawfare and they're bringing cases under the voting rights act or you know the kkkkakak or these acts the christian invigor standard basically means they have no fear of legal fees so that that that's what we're that's what that case that's the only case we've like ever really raised funds for because it's you know we're trying to go to the supreme court and overturn that standard so that the nbillacp doesn't have the presumption so mark alias doesn't have the presumption of good when he brings civil rights cases just because he's the plaintiff in a civil rights case. What I thought is so stupid. Yeah. We could do what William Blackstone highlighted the Middlesex County in England back in like the 1700s. They got tired of the government's court system.
Starting point is 01:16:11 So they just created their own in their own county. How did that work out? Well, for a while, you know, it worked out great. They brought back the old hundred courts and tithing courts of the Anglo-Saxon era. It was primarily for like small claim stuff. But the king didn't have a problem with it or how were people forced to like abide by that? Well, in the same way that that happened in the Anglo-Saxon era, it was in everyone's best interest to make sure it worked well. Because it had become, the courts had been, the government, parliament had created a bunch of courts for small claim stuff that didn't actually have juries.
Starting point is 01:16:53 it was a jury panel, but they were appointed, so they're there, you know, as like bureaucrats, essentially. And it was notoriously backed up, notoriously unjust. And it lasted for like, I don't 150, 200 years that way. And finally, Middlesex County was like, we're done with this. And so people were tired of the problem and they had enough purchase into it that they made it work. And I'm not sure how long that that whole experiment lasted. But, They brought back what, you know, the trial, basically it was trial by jury and it was, that was a case that was affirming the idea that trial by jury was by statute, because that's the way that the juries in these, in middle sex, adjudicated things by conscience.
Starting point is 01:17:39 Interesting. Yeah. What do you were that? But it's an interesting idea that, you know, but it's an interesting idea that, you know, if the power really is us, the people, and it's supposed to be based on consent, then if, If we're getting screwed over by the government's justice system, then we all have a natural, A, a natural right to resist tyranny, and then B, we have a natural right to uphold natural law.
Starting point is 01:18:05 So if we got together as a small community somewhere and someone stole from somebody or had a contract dispute and we randomly selected call people, then under God's law, that's a legitimate system. but the argument against trial by jury is that in fact I'm going to be talking about this on my show on Sunday the sort of how it got subverted in this country and the main argument is that it's the idea of the jury actually judging what the law should be would make the law uncertain which you know hearing Ash's experience and all the other experiences that people have had with the justice in quote system it's anything but certain and there's a quote I like of Spooners where he says basically
Starting point is 01:18:56 you know people they usually go into courts of justice the way men go into battle you know it's like no other alternative is left it's not a place of refuge it's not a place of certainty because they know it's going to be expensive
Starting point is 01:19:10 and he compared it to a labyrinth you have to pay the guides take you through the labyrinth but even the guides get lost or confused or the the confusion benefits them so they intentionally screw you over. I mean, that's, yeah, we're really, really, really far down the river when it comes to justice in this country. Oh, we're from, we're on everything, man.
Starting point is 01:19:32 Is there anything we're not going on the river? I would say that's the most important aspect of it, though, because any law is irrelevant unless it's enforced. And that's the whole point of, of a judgment of your peers is that the government can't enforce a law without the judgment of your peers, which is why they have done more to attack trial by jury than any other institution of liberty. It started pretty early. I found a quote from John Jay, the first Chief Justice that I'm going to read on my show on Sunday, that he says, so where is it? This was from back in the early, early days of the Supreme Court,
Starting point is 01:20:17 they actually did jury trials at the Supreme Court. So this was his instruction to a jury in a Supreme Court trial. And it was, he says, where'd it go? He says, it is presumed that juries are the best judges of facts. It is, on the other hand, presumed that courts are the best judges of the law. That's the common maxim that people have. He says, but still both objects are lawfully within your power of decision. you have nevertheless a right to take upon yourselves the judge of both and to determine the law as well as the fact in controversy.
Starting point is 01:20:58 Imagine a people had kept that in their mind over the last 250 years and a lot different situations. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, the trust in the judicial system is it's got to be on an all-time low. I mean, I know especially people on the right that see this two-tier. system of justice. It just seems like if you are unfortunate enough to end up in court, you better hope that the judge's interests line up with your interests, and that's your only hope unless you just happen to have a really ethical judge that does his job. But it's like a crapshoot, right? I mean, there's so many activist judges now, and it's just, it's frustrating.
Starting point is 01:21:43 I mean, what do we do? I mean, I say while you're, while you can, we still have the optics of trial by jury so you can still what if you get on a jury just do as much to muck up the system as you can and just nullify even if the fact the facts are that the person broke the law you just you still acquit then because the law is by default law is bad let's just like murder i mean that's obvious right i'm like it if i was on the oj jury that would have worked out great well i mean i'm saying like if it's murder like if the person is up for murder then you there's you can't nullify a law against murder because that's one of natural that's a natural law yeah but but as far as like the statute like you know i i've told the story before of the uh the fire department showing up
Starting point is 01:22:33 my house because i had a fire my fire pit someone didn't like and i was using scraps from my wood shop that were maple and oak that were seasoned but they had gone through a planer they were rectangular in shape and i was told that it's against city code if you're going to burn something it has to be seasoned and split i.e. it has to be triangle shaped wood. So it's the geometry that matters. And if I'd wanted to fight that, I would have gotten fined. And if I wanted to fight that, I would have gone to court. And then I would have been my life, my property, my money would have been taken away from me because of some stupid statute. Whereas if, you know, civil stuff should be jury trials as well. They've taken a lot of those away from juries. They could, the jury would
Starting point is 01:23:14 have been like, that's retarded. Like I burn wood scraps. And they do that for efficiency. For efficiency, see, we don't, you know, you don't need a jury trial. In civil cases, just do a bench trial. The judge is the arbiter so they can decide. Everything's fine. You don't need a jury because we have a statute and you clearly violate the statute, end of story. And that has created a situation in which, and I've been hammering on this recently, where if you have to ask permission to do what is yours by God's given right to you,
Starting point is 01:23:40 then that's not liberty. You know, you go to build something on your property and you have, what permit do I need? That's not liberty. Yeah. So actually, Justice Borsuch talks about that in his book, Overruled the Human Toll of Too Much Law. He talks about a hair braiding. He talks about a bunch of different, not the jury aspect, but the law aspect, right? And it's particularly what you're talking about.
Starting point is 01:24:05 You have a skill. You have a resource. You want to engage in some sort of trade or do a thing. And the society tells you you need all manner of permits and licenses and all of the different things. And it came down to there was one case he talks about in his book that was a lady who braided hair, right? That was like it. It was like the old. I know she didn't have the, it wasn't even just the license.
Starting point is 01:24:31 She had a license, I think. She didn't have the like required amount of training hours for this like native African way that she was braiding hair that she had been taught by her, you know, mother who grandmother and everything. And there was no training classes for that. but she still needed a bunch of training hours in order to satisfy the permit requirements, but there's no training hours available on what she does because it's this like obscure thing. And she eventually, you know, got away, but they ended up like she eventually didn't, you know, she was eventually able to have her hair braiding business. Right.
Starting point is 01:25:07 But it was like they changed, they ended up changing a statute, if I recall it correctly, so that it was like, okay, if you have less than whatever or it's something else, then you have an exemption as opposed to this requirement is bullshit in the first place. Right. Yeah. It's like we'll create an exemption to the bullshit requirement. Right. And you can-
Starting point is 01:25:27 No common sense. One of the things that Splinter says I like is that when you look at the way the system has been, with the effects of the system are an indication as to its design. So if the effects of a system are to less than liberty, in spite of all, the language that we're given about how wonderful everything is about you know the American system whatever if the effect is to remove liberty you have to in you you can infer design by the effect and like that's I mean it's it's crazy what we I mean if the frog in the pot of water is the is the classic you know cliche
Starting point is 01:26:05 analogy but it's so true like they didn't do it overnight it was you know over a long straight long period of time yeah but I'm gonna go into that the history of that this Sunday. Nice. That's exciting. You already did, didn't you? I'm, well, not specifically.
Starting point is 01:26:24 The chapter I'm going over is called the juries of today are illegal. No, I mean, you already recorded it as well. Oh, no, I'm recorded. I'm going to record it after the day. Oh, I thought you said you recorded today. But you got all my notes ready to go. I got to work on Sunday nights.
Starting point is 01:26:42 When is the ether start? When I'm done with, trial by jury and probably two to three weeks after Gart is my guess. Because every time I think I'm getting close to being done and they're just more, like I want to do the trial by jury book. It's a book. It's not really an essay. It's like 180 pages.
Starting point is 01:27:01 I'm trying to do it justice. The next week I'll be going over his chapter on majority rule, which will be interesting. Are you doing that show with Polly Mathenon? Yeah, Polly Mathenon is going to join me because the dude is a certified certifiable genius. He really is. And he has a deep baritone radio voice.
Starting point is 01:27:22 So that will be very pleasing for people to listen to. And he knows the stuff inside now. I enjoy it and I know a fair amount about it, but he knows more of the technical side of things. So we're going to, we're going to try to break it down as simply as we possibly can. And the ether topic is unbelievably interesting. you know kind of to give me give me an overview yeah okay everything is the ether the ether is the
Starting point is 01:27:54 medium in which everything exists and also is made of it is essentially pure potential as far as energy goes although energy is kind of a nebulous concept but that um it is a communication medium. It is a reification medium. Reification, meaning making something real. It transmits vibration and disturbances. It was referred to in times past
Starting point is 01:28:26 as like a gaseous ether or something like. It's not a gas. It's not a substance. It's not Cartesian in the sense that it doesn't have a weight, a mass, or anything like that. It's literally just the medium in which everything exists. And so something like light, which travels, so to speak, is a wave.
Starting point is 01:28:46 When you're measuring the speed of light, you're not actually measuring something traveling. You're measuring the speed at which the medium vibrates, and light is a particular manifestation of the ether. Think of water has, you know, or any matter has multiple states, but water is liquid, ice, and gas. And so there are different modalities, so to speak, or different manifestations of water.
Starting point is 01:29:12 based on temperature, based on pressure, vibration, etc. And so the ether is the same way. So light is it is something that vibrates through the ether, but it is also an expression of the ether itself. Magnetism is an expression of the ether. Matter itself is an expression of the ether in the sense that it is literally high-frequency light to the point that it has become solid. Everything conceivable?
Starting point is 01:29:41 everything everything conceivable is ether essentially yeah that's that's the that's the argument um and um it is yeah it's really fast explains or what ether or oh ether or yes huh yeah but the dad jokes for the um it explains the uh it explains the dual split experiment is is uh you know the dual slit experiment is uh you know is a conundrum if you believe that light is itself is moving versus just disturbing the medium um you know even though wow they it acts different when you observe it well when you observe it you're actually when you're putting a measuring uh you know sensor or something to try to you measure a photon so to speak you're actually putting something in the in the ether that is causing a disturbance causing a different pattern to display itself.
Starting point is 01:30:39 I mean, there's, yeah, there's, it, it explained, and the principles of the ether also explain everything from how human beings interact, explain, and I'm not just, I'm not talking like in a, John looks very skeptical right now. Yeah, that's fine. The, the way the ether baseless conspiracy of self. The way that relationships happen, the way that relationship to God happens.
Starting point is 01:31:08 Yeah, it's fascinating stuff. I mean, John, the alternative, the alternative to what Jonathan is saying would be that there is like some sentience to light because it would be affected by you watching it.
Starting point is 01:31:22 It knows you're watching and so it will enter through the slit in a different way. But if there is something that is disturbing the path of light that would make more sense than light light is conscious and and when you hear people talking about like a wave you know oh there's a wave well a wave is not a thing a wave a wave is something a wave is something that a thing does yeah and so if light has moves in a wave pattern then that's an indication that there is something through which it is moving but light is
Starting point is 01:31:55 not itself traveling what you're witnessing is the just kind of like if you're sitting in the the middle of a pond and you flap your arms and there's ripples that go out to the side the those are waves but it's the water waving and it's not like you are emitting something you're just disturbing the the medium in the same way as we're talking now our vocal cords are are flapping and we're disturbing the atmosphere between our mouths and our microphones and we're not really emitting anything we're just disturbing the atmosphere around us and our ears interpret that as as sound. And there's a famous quote from Tesla
Starting point is 01:32:34 wherein he says that light is a sound wave in the ether. It moves in a longitudinal manner, like a pulse type pattern. And so what gets interpreted as like a photon is actually just a point at which the magnetic
Starting point is 01:32:49 and the dielectric or essentially electrostatic manifestation of the ether kind of meet and create a pulse. And that can get and that gets observed as a photon. But anyway, we'll go on to all this stuff in a lot more detail. And we're going to try to dumb it down as much as we possibly can.
Starting point is 01:33:09 We're still kind of working on our notes to find a good way to explain stuff. Because you're talking about looking at the world in a just completely different manner. This will be a must see. To me, it makes it so much more fascinating. So this came up today, John Drake and I were having a conversation. about the third temple as one does right you know it was it was was was revelation fulfilled in 70 80 years it's still to come and we went back and forth and back and forth and I ended up at one point in the conversation well maybe it
Starting point is 01:33:43 just keeps happening in like a loop it's like well time is a construct and the ether explains all clearly time is is a measurement of yes well I'm interested to watch that whenever you start it I'm Yeah, Polymath is a great dude. He was always active in Chris's chat, and he and I talk all the time and share notes back and forth, and he's a good resource. And we both struggle with powers of explanation when it comes to this stuff, but we are going to do our best to make it as under. And I'm going to be doing demonstrations as well. we'll do the double the dual split experiment and um what you can do with a laser on like a razor blade and stuff it's not as like high tech as you know but you can go on youtube channels and see people performing that you can do it at home if you have a laser player so interesting awesome
Starting point is 01:34:42 um polymathen does he like do that stuff like what does he do for work he is uh he without docking him yeah he he he he's like in machining and manufacturing you know type stuff and um kind of a jack wall trades kind of a guy cool yeah he's cool good cool dude i'm gonna fan i'll be right back again my daughter what i what i got from what you were saying jonathan was that wave is a verb and the light is an out uh yeah i i think i would agree to that well especially the wave part yeah um and that's that's also the problem with that light is not a down is light something that something else is moving through too? Well, light itself is not moving. Light is a disturbance, a particular type of disturbance of the ether.
Starting point is 01:35:35 Okay, so it might not be enough. I get what you're saying. So wait a second, wait a second. When God said let there be light, he didn't create a thing? Well, that's the problem with language, is that we want to reify abstract concepts. And so when God said, let there be light, he was in, I would believe that he's introducing the first light phenomenon in the ether by creating a disturbance. And when you understand that matter is itself, light that is, you could think of it in a crude sense, light is essentially, or matter is essentially frozen light. Where wherein you, and they've actually done this with lasers where they have focused lasers.
Starting point is 01:36:21 Now Matt Trump has the baseless conspiracy's face on. John laughed, but Matt has filled the void. Once light gets to a high enough frequency, it has, it, where you essentially can't measure, it essentially solidifies, which if you think of radioactive, you know, elements, they can actually punch holes through, you know, the radioactive material. You think of like an x-ray.
Starting point is 01:36:51 is actually punching holes through physical material, which is essentially light on almost the threshold of being solid. And so, like, well, how could that be? It was because light, it's not itself a thing. It's the manifestation of the ether, and that at a certain frequency, a certain energy, it literally solidifies. And so the idea that matter can't be created or destroyed
Starting point is 01:37:18 is actually, in that context, is not true, because if you have enough energy and focus that energy in a particular manner, you can actually, out of the ether, essentially, create matter. It takes a lot of energies to do that, which they claim the idea, I'm not, I don't know if black holes are actually true, but what the writing is about black holes is that they're massive galactic jets, so to speak, and they're spilling out massive amounts of hydrogen, which is one of the basic element of the universe almost,
Starting point is 01:37:52 and that it is essentially high, high, high frequency light. And there's ways to demonstrate that or explain it more in depth that we will definitely go into. Cool. It's good stuff. It explains that, I mentioned this yesterday, it explains the MH370. What are those orbs floating around it? All Orbs?
Starting point is 01:38:20 Well, no. Eater Orbs. All right, no. John Drake, shut up for second. Matt, Trump, do you get to respond now? I mean, that's loving. I'm just listening. This is all new to me.
Starting point is 01:38:35 Yeah, it's not commonly taught in most physics lecture halls. I'll grant you that. It used to be back in the day. I mean, this was the type of stuff that all of the, of the greats of electrostatic, we talked about this before, they were all varying degrees of ether, because there's different conceptions of what the ether itself would actually be, but Tesla and Maxwell and Heaviside and Pridesostimus, those guys were all ether physicists. And really, the ether as a viable explanation for anything was, I would argue, was deliberately
Starting point is 01:39:12 removed from the conversation after Tesla died, which is you want to go down the conspiracy theory rabbit hole when John Trump got a hold of Tesla's documents. About that time is when if you wanted to get grant funding or anything like that, you did not mention the ether.
Starting point is 01:39:32 And when you look at the technologies that, like the technology that Quas describes as far as like quantum entanglement being used for communication or things like that, that's actually goes against quantum orthodoxy, according to my understanding. But it is very possible in an ether context. But like with the MH370, the idea of being able to just vanish something out of thin air seemingly,
Starting point is 01:40:01 that is 100% within the realm of possibility with an ether understanding of what makes up reality. That's cool. I was watching I was watching General Quast and Jordan on Thursday and one thing that really suck out to me was he was he like you know how kind General Quast is but he basically was just like people know that and it's proven that Einstein's theory of relativity is he didn't say bullshit but I heard it's bullshit it's it's wrong yeah and like that was I knew it like I believe I've believed that for a very long time but to hear him just like flat out say it like on this show is pretty cool because I'm like I was I knew it like I believe I believe that for a very long time but to hear him just like flat out say it like on this show is pretty cool because I Yeah, I didn't say it was bullshit. No. Yeah. That's just going to say that's that yeah, even Einstein acknowledged that this, this is probably not 100% correct. It's just the most correct for what we have at this time.
Starting point is 01:40:52 Am I right, Matt? I mean, you would know better. I'm sorry. Yeah. So what cross said was that that it has a limited range of viability, which is that's the word. That's just as Newton's laws do. cam red between the lines yeah and um well yeah it people do sort of make a broader leap to uh a lot of things about that so i don't know what he's talking about specifically in regard to uh the limitations of general
Starting point is 01:41:25 relativity uh i'd have to ask him i have a ton of questions after that that uh broadcast with jordan fascinating though right um yeah well there were i was very confused by a lot of things he said said. I actually went through the broadcast very slowly on half speed playing it over and over again, typing what he said at one point into a word document because I'm like, I got to hear what he's trying to say here. So yeah, I have a lot of questions about some of the claims he made there and why he was making some of the claims. But in regard to relativity, yeah, there's, I don't know of there's the limitations on general relativity are more of a theoretical nature than they are experimental nature right now there's no there's there's nothing i'm aware of of any phenomenon
Starting point is 01:42:21 and gravitation that says this is something we can't account for by general relativity but there are there are there are in theory areas where we know it wouldn't apply and but those are mostly on the quantum level in terms of quantum gravitation because we We don't have any theory of how to combine quantum mechanics with general relativity in a coherent way. So that's a known thing, however. So I don't know quite what he's talking about there. Some of the other things he said there may be sort of confused about where he's coming from in regard to certain things.
Starting point is 01:42:57 And his terminology really was confused me at some point. In the claim about, well, I did a show about anti-gravity last. year it was after that episode where that guy showed up at at the trump hotel in las Vegas where I had the privilege of staying recently and the his his cyber truck blew up and he made some claims I guess in emails regarding anti-gravitational technology so I said you know what I'm going to at least look into this to see see what's going on there and you know there is some there as far as people doing research about it certainly
Starting point is 01:43:39 And there was speculation in the past about possible things like this. I worked with a really great physicist named Bryce DeWitt at the University of Texas. He once yelled at me at a cocktail party, but that's a long story. But when he was at North Carolina, he got funding from some institute was trying to look for some anti-gravity technology. And I don't, I didn't know that at all. When I was in Austin, I just, I was like, Bryce DeWitt. It was, but they're really, my impression is that nothing really came out of that. But there, the idea that there's research going on at Redstone Arsenal in Alabama about this.
Starting point is 01:44:21 Some people claim that. It's, it's very sort of vague. But what I did notice was that there had been sort of really speculative material published in the, you know, in the 50s, I think, saying, oh, talking about gravity, making gravitational bubble. around things and to me it sort of never got beyond drawing diagrams about things right and speculating about that and that cost was basically describing exactly that he was describing things that were sort of in a in a in a very speculative state years ago and so I don't quite know what he means when he says those things I would definitely want to ask him that I had a chance to are you going to
Starting point is 01:45:08 show yeah i was going to say that i would go on his show yeah i i don't i don't haven't been invited but i certainly would no i think i think everyone's invited yeah i think we have a sign-up sheet sign up you had to talk to john about it yeah yeah i don't think i look at a date yeah but certainly i would love to do that he's he's definitely a interesting man and so you know it makes me it makes me think you know is he he does because you know the terminology he was using in that and like I said I typed it all out because I like I want to know you know I need precision you know what somebody says the physics to me is about precision it's about exactly defining things being able to express them in mathematical terms that where you have measurable things you have you have you can prove things through a chain of logic
Starting point is 01:46:02 and so you know and he was he seemed to be talking about a lot of things all lumped together and I He was like, well, this guy's really sharp. This doesn't seem quite the typical of the, what I would have expected of him when he's talking about this, given his experience in, you know, he, I think he got his undergraduate degree in, in aeronautical engineering, if I'm not mistaken it at the Air Force Academy. And so, you know, there's certain things that you would, you would expect out of at least that level of education, plus of his long experience in, in the military, his connections with the space force or potential. connections with that, I guess, and NASA. So I'm like, okay, you, you're, I feel like either you're, you're, you're, you're sort of purposely saying not everything you know or, or, or, or something else going on. So that's why one of the reasons I was very confused about that, but certainly.
Starting point is 01:46:56 Well, I know that I know that his show, um, one thing that he definitely points out is that he gives us like the, the surface level and we're supposed to go dig on our own. Like he'll give us direction. on different places we can go, which I love because for me, when I was when I was younger in my 20s, I was fascinated by by listening to people's talks for like two hours on some type of scientific topic. But what I, the problem I had is I wouldn't take their word as bond, but like I would take what they had and then try to combine it with something else, somebody else said instead of just going out and doing my own research.
Starting point is 01:47:29 And now like I'm forced to actually go search for stuff my own. And I found that a lot of the things I thought to be true in the past when I do my own digging on them, They may be true, but I just don't agree with them. So I like the way that he handles his show. And I think it's because it's also an hour, he really just gives us introduction into what is possible or what could be possible. Because more about, at least for me, it's more about thinking about the future rather than what we know for sure.
Starting point is 01:47:52 Yeah, it felt like listening to him talk about the, you know, the gravidic propulsion idea sounded like basically what I had sort of encountered in literature that was, speculative it's it's speculative but to me I'm I tell people I'm you know one of the reasons I don't talk about physics a lot on the air in Badlands although I did a physics show tonight talked about Epstein and Cold Fusion tonight on the show oh yeah people really liked it and yeah I think it was but I had done you know I started my show three years ago and I was co-host with Patrick and it had come out of a talk
Starting point is 01:48:35 that I had given about CERN at Threadfest in South Lake, Texas. And so, and I had sort of, I had sort of jacked it up on CERN a little bit and had fun with it in a way that I almost sort of regretted later because it's like, you know, but one of the things I feel like is, is, I tell people, I'm, I'm a very conservative physicist. I, I, which means that conservative in the sense of, of playing things very close to the vest and wanting statements I make to be true. And harping on the true is my advisor,
Starting point is 01:49:12 undergraduate advisor used to say. And so I very much limit myself in the kind of claims I want to make. And so I feel like if I talk, it's often to throw cold water on things. And people would approach me at conferences and say, oh, I've got this, what do you think of this and this? And I don't want to be the guy is like, well, that's, you know,
Starting point is 01:49:35 whatever and throw cold water on stuff because I am I am among conservative physicist perhaps the most open-minded one you're ever going to meet in that he's like oh you you want to talk about grittic propulsion tell me what you got I will listen and I'm not you know I and I don't I I'm not one of those you know skeptics you know that's like oh it you have to believe in the mainstream interpretation or else you're stupid you know the professor Dave stuff so on the one hand, I did a show with Patrick. And I had, when I agreed to do the show in, and we came on the air in January
Starting point is 01:50:11 20, 23, you know, Patrick had not come out as a flat earther. And he came out as a flat earther like two days before our first show. And literally, I could not think that. I'm like, what the nice rug pull there? Just get myself into. And so I spent the first couple months on that show. Patrick, he didn't really prepare much. He just wanted to come on and sort of talk.
Starting point is 01:50:34 about how everything is fake and gay. I know. Uh-huh. And even the I, even the image for our show, the Spell Breaker's show, was I, I didn't even pay attention to it. I don't know how it was generated or who did it, but it was, it was an astronaut wearing a straight jacket sitting in a field. And I was like, oh, okay, I get it now. I get it now. And so I, and I just did not want to go where Patrick wanted to take the show. I was just not going to go there. And, and so I took control. of the show from the beginning and planned everything out and basically played defense against
Starting point is 01:51:09 the kind of inquiry he wanted to go, which is everything's fake and gay. I was like, you know what? I don't believe that. I just don't believe that. I'm sorry. And I'm not, I will sit and tell you that that a lot of particle theory since the 1970s is probably way off mark, you know, and that probably the last solid theory we had was, you could say it was maybe in 1935. But, But to throw out everything because of that, I just not going to go there because that is not my experience with things. So I'm very conservative, but I'm also very open-minded. Make your case. I'll listen out for you.
Starting point is 01:51:50 I'm not going to sit there and say, oh, that's not what we believe. That's not what science is about. I told my audience tonight, anybody can be a physicist. You don't have to have a degree to be. physics the the the science stands on its own you can you can write journal articles you can submit preprints we don't even really have peer reviewed stuff is not so important in physics anymore that's out the window now every because that was because we had to have that because of the scarcity of paper in journals now we've got preprint servers that you can upload
Starting point is 01:52:23 anybody can write a physics paper and upload it to a preprint server that's how science works now which is a nice system the way it works now so you know if you went on Ultimately, there's no gatekeeping. Ultimately, there's no gatekeeping, but we hate gatekeeping. But it means there's a rigorous standard. I guarantee you, if you go on Quash, show, I guarantee you that he'll have a good conversation with you and that he'll be able to handle anything you throw at him. Last year at Deadwood, I was at a table with some guys from Chris's chat and the ineffable, the NFL B kid, the guy's, he's classic. Like he quas comes up to say hi he just right out of the gate he's like dude we're not mining a helium three on the dark side of the moon
Starting point is 01:53:08 And Quas like well you know and that it was like I'm really fascinated about that that part of his thing about space mining. I think is very fascinating idea and you know I when I do my show and I bring up these stuff I know I know there's always going to be somebody or there used to be always somebody out there you know if you mentioned oh oh oh space is fake and gay oh the earth is flat oh uh their nuclear weapons don't exist I did a show about that too. I examined the case of against the existence of nuclear weapons. And I came at almost every show I do on these topics, I come away saying, well, here's the case for it.
Starting point is 01:53:43 As far as I can see, here's my comments. Here's the case against it. You're going to have to make up your own mind because I can't come to a conclusion yet based on these things. And that tends to be, you know, it's not as satisfying. I understand why Patrick and his cohort, they get such wonderful ratings because they'll sit there and make any claim they want to in the most extreme way and in the most provocative way and there's a certain segment of the audience that responds to that and and and i just
Starting point is 01:54:11 i'm not going to furnish that but on tonight's show i i talked about fusion because we talked about cold fusion i'm going to do second part next week because we didn't really even get into the idea of whether cold fusion is valid or not i just talked about the how epstein had played a part in it's in the claim to a plate a part in its suppression and how that tied back in a weird way back to the very first claims of nuclear fission and and um that uh through uh through robert maxwell's old business partner robert maxwell being the father of gillane and uh and and gavririroo maxwell who is a and who who's a sister but i mentioned when we came up to fusion i said well we've got you know fusion is is claimed to be the first thing
Starting point is 01:54:58 it popped up the power source of the of stars of the sun nuclear fusion so the hydrogen fusing ultimately into deuterium and then helium and on up and and and i said i made the remark and this is sort of typical of how i try to talk about these things is that there are alternate theories about why stars burn um essentially the burning it produces the light and heat and uh i was i i didn't mentioned but i and i done a show about this about pierre robatai who's a very respected scientist in his in his domain of MRI technology had come up with embrace the different theory and i had looked into it i thought you know what this sort of does have merit i think this is really fascinating idea so i had this sort of say well i put an asterix here on this i'll give you the mainstream
Starting point is 01:55:46 i'll give you what the mainstream interpretation is but um i tend to think that it may be different It may be a different process. And that's as far as I took it on the show tonight. And that's as far as we're going to take it tonight because this is, uh, this is this is word that word. We got to read the rents. Okay. All right. You had you.
Starting point is 01:56:08 Thank you, Matt. I do. All right. Thank you, Jonathan. I'm looking forward to that. My science trial. Yeah. And certainly appreciate your feedback.
Starting point is 01:56:15 Yeah. Um, that you have the rants. I do. I have, mine start at 920. So because I was, um, I believe I have them from the very big. beginning. Let me get it pulled up here. Okay. All right. So, oh yeah, you got you got before me too, so you definitely have them. Gosh, oh gosh, I guess I don't. I didn't start mine until 1052. Oh,
Starting point is 01:56:41 that would be 922 or no, 952 for you. So maybe you have one before I do. I have the final demand. My first one is a rave daddy and the first word words are after and join. a fun day. Okay. So my first one is Raive Daddy, but it's they 100%. So okay, I'll pull up the one right before that because that's the second one I have. So let me share my screen. I don't have either of those. Yeah. But Zach, after that, go to yours because I have it only in the chat. Okay. So whenever you're ready. Well, I'm, oh, there it is. Okay. Yeah. Remove. And I'll read it since I have it here. Okay. So the first one is from Raive Daddy 523 for $10 says after enjoying a fun day in the Gart telegram chat. I wanted to ask about the 2026 Badlands calendars. The old one is ending in April,
Starting point is 01:57:30 so we need a new one. Will they be for sale at Gart? So I think we all know that we need to, yeah, thank you. We all need to get on the creation of that new calendar. But I think that anticipating them to be ready by the upcoming Gart is probably a bit of a stretch goal. We'll see what we can do, though, because we definitely need to do that. And then Rave Daddy with another rant says they 100% use TV to pre-program us. I love going back and watching shows from years
Starting point is 01:58:01 ago. Ever since Trump talked about Alien Files, I've been diving into Stargate SG1, Atlantis, Universe, and Movies. My friend Kornemek was on Stargate. Yeah, he played Jonas on Stargate. All right. And then the final demand says,
Starting point is 01:58:19 John, a simple dick drawing does not induce the level of shock and awe, and the old ladies at my voting location needs. Only way is a huge, vainy penis to quote Q, nothing can stop what is coming. Nice. Gotcha. That is keeping in the spirit with only lands.
Starting point is 01:58:41 Yes, it is. Yes, that's getting us right back to our roots. I feel, I feel like a great return to our roots. Return to our root. Yeah, we had to make at least one more dick joke before the end, the show ended tonight. If it only lasts longer than four hours, you need to see a doctor. If you need to see a doctor. And then Rave Daddy again says a reverse polymarket where bets can't ever be confirmed and the house always wins.
Starting point is 01:59:10 You should call it bad markets, L.O.S. That's the U.S. election system. There we go. All right. Kay Kelly. And Kaye actually mentioned this to me on my show earlier. and I forgot to play it because somebody else came in with another video and that's how I ended the show. So I will play this video for us at the end of the show. Anybody see the Tom McDonald video he dropped today?
Starting point is 01:59:31 He dropped a video about Epstein Files, famous people in the Epstein Files. Yeah, I didn't watch it, but I did see it was dropped. Yeah. And then ZBM says, my grandma was going to become a nun to who's going to become a nun too. And the day she was going to join, she met her gunnery sergeant Marine Hunt. husband who had to lie about his age because he signed up at 15 was years before he told my grandma. Wow. She was older than him and he lied to get in there and take her away from the convent. Wow.
Starting point is 02:00:07 Take away from the convent. Man, that is like a fantasy waiting to happen right there. Raive Daddy 523 also says part one. I think the best way to boil everyone's views down to a simple explanation is that we need a more educated society that understands the laws, rules, codes, and regulations, part two. So that when you have to be called to jury duty to peers, so when you have to be called to jury duty, the peers will judge that person based on education levels. This also applies to voting. So I mentioned the other day that if you've ever read Starship Troopers, I like the, I like the idea of people not gaining citizenship and the right to vote until they have served their compulsory military service. Oh, interesting.
Starting point is 02:00:54 Yeah. Yeah, I can probably get down with that. If you, that is just very high level. That is the stated goal of what we're doing with the jury experience at Gart, Nashville. So badlandsmedia.tv slash events. Our goal is to have a really fun experience that people come away with a greater level of education and knowledge of what a jury is, what it's supposed to be, how it works, rights, etc. It's going to be awesome.
Starting point is 02:01:22 All right. And now I also, I see people in the chat saying they feel bad for Matt. Matt, I want you to know that we all love you and we think you're brilliant. And Ash just, there was no other way for her to get in there and we all need to go. But I want you to tell us if you feel like you've been slighted because we all love you. Not in the least. Okay. Show business.
Starting point is 02:01:44 It's that show business. Okay. Now, if you could also turn your camera off and then turn it back on so that you're not frozen in the same position you were an hour ago. It's a great shot of you, dude. It really is. I think that's why people are worried. Yeah, it might help people to recognize. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:02:04 I just thought you were really good at holding still. Yeah. Okay, okay. And then next, the Liberty Lion says, yo, just stopping in. still no power. I may need to change to charge stuff on the Jeep soon. I made a critical error. Note when storing backup generator do not store in garage with electric entry only door. Oh my God. Yeah, I keep mine outside covered so that I can have access to it all times. Okay. And then Raive Daddy again, thank you so much for the generosity tonight.
Starting point is 02:02:37 Raive Daddy. Americans issue is that a trial by jury is hoping that they are tried by an educated people instead of retards yeah that seems to be getting harder and harder every year read spooners science of justice essay for the answer to that question it's a short essay you can get on the online library of liberty does it just say the people are all retarded uh no it's not on the sound board okay okay people okay but they are okay trying to change it 2812 vpj uh got to hit the honky tonks in downtown Nashville. Tutsis. Heck yeah.
Starting point is 02:03:17 Yes, we're going to Tutsis. Oh, that's actually a place. I thought he was trying to be cute. I thought it was like, yeah, I was with Jack on that one. Tutsis. Kid Rock's got a honky talk in Nashville. That was pretty good. Okay.
Starting point is 02:03:30 Some others. And then Rave Daddy says, Ash, it sounds like I may, I may have started space revolution as the right title for this panel because this topic can be a re-evaluation and a evolution at the same time. Call it bicameral according to Beebe. So in the the Gart telegram chat, I asked for type of topic ideas, right? What panels do you guys want to see? We did our first live stream yesterday. It was a lot of fun. It's a, um, it's so fiery, but mostly fire, fire,
Starting point is 02:04:04 fiery, but mostly peaceful. And we got some good topics out of it, um, but I posed it to the chat and rave daddy put space revaluation. And I thought, But that was a fascinating concept, right? Like, go back to the beginning of humanity's journey to the stars and the, you know, 20 years doing an audit firm type stuff, but the, you know, or at least having to take their trainings, not really doing the work, but taking their trainings. So the revaluation of our space investments, our space assets, all that kind of stuff I thought was interesting.
Starting point is 02:04:37 I think you actually meant to say revolution. So we had a little back and forth about what it should be. Well, it would be interesting if the money that NASA was allegedly spending would actually be spent on space travel and wasn't being sort of backdoored into like Black Ops intelligence operations. Okay, but if space is fake, Zach, where is the money going to go, man? Allegedly we're going back to the moon next year. Okay. So we'll see. From what I understand.
Starting point is 02:05:08 Is there going to be a dune buggy? I, you know, I don't know if there's going to be a dune buggy. if all things being equal, there should be a dune buggy waiting up there. Right? Yeah. And the cameraman. Can we rescue the cameraman? Oh my God.
Starting point is 02:05:22 All of those Hasselblad cameras that are just like chilling up on the moon. If they bring those back, they would be worth so much money. Those lenses were something else. But so allegedly what they're going to do is the Tesla rockets. I don't, are they called Artemis? Is that what the big rocket is? I don't remember, but it's supposed to fly up there and then it will land. And then they've got some process to gradually tip it onto its side.
Starting point is 02:05:51 And then the rocket itself will become the habitat. And then they'll build out from there. That's cool. Yeah. Very cool. And then Mrs. Rea Freedom Fighter, good to see you, hun. She says, a fun show tonight.
Starting point is 02:06:04 Thank you. Thanks, Murph. And then Digital Marine says, Matt, tell us about string. T. I think maybe string theory. What has it solved? Is it real? Why does it seem like it's a cornhole for physics? Hasn't solved anything except getting people money and careers and positions. Is it real? Well, it's a real theory. It's so is glad it provided any answers. It's also a real theory. Yeah, my joke is you know, you've heard the Alan Ginsberg in the in how you said i've seen the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness and my paraphrase
Starting point is 02:06:48 and i even used this at a conference one time is i've seen the best minds of my generation destroyed by string theory so that's which is sort of true it was all the rage when i was in graduate school and it absorbed a lot of mental energy not me i'd stayed away from it a The Tesla applicable quote to that, although it wasn't specifically about string theory, would be there's a lot of men in science that can think deeply but not clearly. Real quick, you want to pull up my screen real quick? This is what Tootsies is for everybody that's wondering. It's a big old purple building. Oh, right here?
Starting point is 02:07:26 Yeah, that's the one in Nashville. So we go there, look for the purple building. Looks kind of gay. I was like, maybe prints on the building. I don't know. They have live music in there. Like if you go to the website, you can see it gets packed in there. It's a fun place, lots of drinks, obviously.
Starting point is 02:07:43 But yeah, it's a good time. Right on. Okay. All right, guys. Well, I'm going to throw up this Tom McDonald video. And then we can all see each other later. Do you guys want to tell everybody? Yeah, thank you.
Starting point is 02:07:56 Yeah, go ahead. My show tomorrow is it, what time is it at 11 a.m.? 10? 10. Okay, thank you. 10 a. The Blitz, yes. We've burning bright and I went long and covered two topics, but it was a really fun conversation.
Starting point is 02:08:14 So tune in tomorrow morning. It's only on substack. You can't watch it anywhere else. You have to be on the substack. Badlands. Substack. Nice. And then on audio files, Brad and I are doing a Q-themed show.
Starting point is 02:08:26 So you'll have to tune in and see what that's all about in honor of this Tuesday being the 17th, of course. 17th. St. Patrick's saying. And then my show at 730, Flo. Does anyone know if Alpha's doing his show after that? I don't know. Whatever. And then DPH, Saturday night, DPH 1030, Eastern Time with Chris Paul and John Harold.
Starting point is 02:08:50 Okay. All right. And with that, I think we'll go ahead and sign off. I hope everyone here has a wonderful evening. Everybody in the chat, hope you have a great weekend. And I'll be back Monday at 5 p.m. Well, first I'll be back here at 10 a.m. with Brian and then my own channel at 5 p.m.
Starting point is 02:09:04 and then of course baseless conspiracies at 10.30. So have a good one. All right, everybody. They are bunch of Satanists, criminals, murderers and pedos. We all pray to God while they worshiping the devil. Yeah, it's Hollywood. The war of family, politicians left and right. They seem anti-American.
Starting point is 02:09:35 They anti-ante-Axie-A-Christ. Anti-Christ. They seem anti-American. They see anti-American. They anti-A-A-Krice. It ain't left and right, no markers. Now it's good and evil. They used to call it a conspiracy, but now it's real.
Starting point is 02:09:55 We've seen the files and the facts don't care how you feel. They having pizza parties, and that means they eating people. This might wake him up. Q and 9 didn't make it up. Missing kids got flown to Jeffries Island by who paid enough. The rich and famous, the young eat human flesh. It ain't for fun. It's ancient ritual suck in adrenic chrome from baby's blood.
Starting point is 02:10:14 They call us crazy, but they should be behind bars. They call us liars because they don't want to get charged. They call us conspiracy theorists, but it's. their hearts, they know all the names they call out saying as bad as what they are. They are Satan is criminals, murderers and pedos. We all pray to God while they worshiping the devil. Yeah, it's Hollywood, the royal family, politicians left and right. They seem anti-American, they anti-anti- Antichrist.
Starting point is 02:10:45 They seem anti-American, they anti-Anti-Aprice. It ain't a culture war no more. The real fight is started. We've been up against each other, but now we the targets. It's the rappers, it's the actors. The elites and charges. Kings and Queens, they out bowing to the Prince of Darkness. Things ain't getting better.
Starting point is 02:11:05 They run the world with rich investors. The cult came from Egyptian deserts. Now the cannibals and Gucci sweaters. Using AI to fuel agendas. Control the news, the truth, the weather. Now we're ruled by a group of dudes who are all satanic child molesters. They call us crazy, but they should be behind bars. They call us liars because they don't want to get charged.
Starting point is 02:11:22 They call us conspiracy theorists, but in their hearts, they know all the nigs they call us ain't as bad as what they are. They are Satanists, criminals, murderers and pedos. We all pray to God while they worshiping the devil. Yeah, it's Hollywood, the royal family, politicians left and right. They seem anti-American. They anti-ante-anity-anity-Christ. Anti-Christ.
Starting point is 02:11:44 They seem anti-American.

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